See Jonathan Mandell Art Artists and the Nazis the Modern Fallout Newsday May 3 1998

Prosecutors charge 88-year-quondam human over 1944 Nazi massacre at Oradour-Sur-Glane – where 642 villagers were shot and burnt

  • Cologne man, 88, charged over murders in French hamlet during WWII
  • 642 men, women and children killed in Oradour-sur-Glane massacre
  • Hitler's SS Panzer Sectionalisation committed the atrocity on June 10, 1944
  • It was to avenge expiry of German officer at hands of French Resistance
  • Village left untouched since fateful solar day to serve as reminder of Nazi evil

An 88-yr-one-time onetime member of an SS armored partitioning has been charged with murder and accompaniment to murder for allegedly taking role in the massacre of 642 French villagers by Nazi soldiers during World War Two.

The man, named but equally Werner C, from Cologne, has been charged with 25 counts of murder  and hundreds of counts of accessory to murder in connection with the slaughter in Oradour-sur-Glane.

The investigation into the massacre where almost the entire population of the village, including more 400 women and children, was gunned down or burned alive on June 10, 1944, was re-opened by German prosecutors concluding year

Scroll downwards for video

Oradour-sur-Glane

Germany's investigators walk in front of the ruins of Oradour-sur-Glane, cardinal France, terminal year as the investigation into the 1944 massacre was reopened

Oradour-sur-Glane

The team of investigators from Berlin (pictured) spoke to the just ii living survivors of the bloodbath, carried out in revenge for the capture of a German language officer by French resistance fighters in a nearby village

Oradour-sur-Glane

The village has purposely been left untouched since the massacre, to serve both as a shrine to those who died and as a abiding reminder of the unremitting evil of the Nazis

On Wednesday, the regional court in Cologne said: 'The prosecutor's office in Dortmund has charged an 88-year-old from Cologne over the murder of 25 people committed by a group, and with aiding and abetting the murder of several hundred people.'

The man was named in documents equally Werner C, his final name withheld in accordance with German language privacy laws.

His lawyer, Rainer Pohlen, said his client was at the village merely had zilch to practice with the massacre.

More than 68 years later, a German prosecutor and senior police officers visited the abandoned village in fundamental France, which Hitlers troops burned to the footing before they fled.

Last yr, German authorities said they believe in that location may notwithstanding be six men still at big, all now in their tardily 80s, who were members of SS Panzer Sectionalization that committed the atrocity.

Oradour

Dortmund prosecutor Andreas Brendel told French reporters in Oradour: 'We hope the survivors may be able to assistance u.s. identify any culprits who are still alive'

Oradour-sur-Glane

Remains of a burnt out vehicle. A new village of Oradour-sur-Glane was built nearby which is now domicile to more than than 2,000 people, while the abandoned village is popular with tourists curious about the war

Rows of burnt out cars

Oradour

Rows of burnt out cars reveal the extent to which the Nazis obliterated the town in 1944

The remains of the church in Oradour

The remains of the church building in which 247 women and 205 children were trapped and killed past the Nazis. The centre window behind the altar is the one through which the just survivor Marguerite Rouffanche escaped

The village has been left untouched since the massacre to serve both as a shrine to those who died and equally a abiding reminder of the unremitting evil of the Nazis.

On June 10, in 1944, SS Panzer Partition fellow member entered the village to avenge a German language soldier kidnapped past the French Resistance,

More 400 women and children were herded into the village church where SS troops soaked the church pews with petrol and barred all exits before setting it on fire.

Only one woman managed to escape the flames.

More than than 200 men were herded into a befouled where machine gunners opened fire, shooting at their legs so they could non move then dousing them with petrol and setting them alight.

A new village of Oradour-sur-Glane was built nearby which is now home to more than two,000 people.

Dortmund prosecutor Andreas Brendel told French reporters in Oradour last year: 'Nosotros hope the survivors may exist able to assistance us identify any culprits who are still alive.'

Oradour-sur-Glane

Oradour-sur-Glane in a film taken not long after the troops left and survivors were left to pick up the pieces

Oradour-sur-Glane

Robert Hebras, 87 - was 1 of only half dozen villagers who escaped the carnage - said: 'Information technology is a very strange moment to encounter German language officials here 68 years later'

Oradour-sur-Glane's church

French historian Guy Perlier told Le Figaro newspaper, 'This illustrates High german thinking which insists on shedding light on all acts committed by the German ground forces during this period'

THE HORROR OF JUNE ten 1944: HOW MARGUERITE ROUFFANCHE ESCAPED NAZIS MURDERERS AND LIVED TO TELL THE TALE

Oradour-sur-Glane

Bodies of the victims lined up following the hamlet massacre in 1944

Early on the morning of 10 June 1944, the 2nd SS Panzer Partitioning entered the village of Oradour-sur-Glane to avenge the decease of a High german officer who had been kidnapped by the French Resistance.

They marched into the town and separated the men from the women and children.

The men were taken to six barns and shed while the women and children were locked in the church building while the village was looted.

The men were said to be shot in the legs before existence doused in petrol and set debark.

6 men escaped although 1 was later establish nearby and shot expressionless. In total 190 men perished.

The soldiers proceeded to the church building and tried to set information technology alight. Women and children tried to escape through the doors and windows of the church building, but were met with motorcar-gun burn down.

A total of 247 women and 205 children died. Two women and one kid survived; one was 47-twelvemonth-quondam Marguerite Rouffanche. She hauled herself out of a window behind the altar, followed by a young woman and child. German soldiers shot all three of them, killing the woman and kid by wounding Rouffanche who escaped into nearby leafage where she stayed until she was rescued the following day.

The following is part of her testimony read out to the 1953 Bordeaux military tribunal:

'Firing flare-up out in the church then harbinger, faggots and chairs were thrown pele-mele onto bodies lying on the stone slabs. I had escaped from the killing and was without injury and so I fabricated use of a smoke cloud to slip backside the altar. In this part of the church there are three windows. I made for the widest 1 in the centre and with the help of a stool used to light the candles, I tried to accomplish information technology. I don't know how simply my strength was multiplied. I heaved myself upward to it equally all-time I could and threw myself out of the opening that was offered to me through the already shattered window. I jumped most ix anxiety down.

'When I looked up I saw I had been followed in my climb by a woman property out her baby to me. She savage down next to me but the Germans, alerted past the cries of the baby, automobile-gunned us. The woman and the mite were killed and I too was injured as I made information technology to a neighbouring garden and hid amid some rows of peas and waited anxiously for someone to come to assist me. That wasn't until the post-obit twenty-four hour period at 5 p.thou.'

Although several probes accept previously been opened into the massacre, they had to exist close downward due to a lack of evidence, and many of the Germans involved in the barbarism, including senior officers, were soon killed in the Battle of Normandy.

But when a historian in 2010 discovered documents implicating all six suspects, still alive and at present aged betwixt 85 and 86, the instance had enough evidence to be re-opened.

Dortmund prosecutor Andreas Brendel said that the aim of terminal yr's visit, the first by German investigators since Earth War Two was to place the exact locations where the SS unit of measurement was deployed and interview witnesses to the massacre.

Camille Senon, one of the survivors who witnessed the aftermath of the massacre in which her family members died, said: 'It is considered  a positive gesture by the Germans to send investigators for the first fourth dimension, 68 years later on, fifty-fifty though I would have liked to have seen it happen sooner'.

In September, Joachim Gauck became the beginning German leader to visit the French 'ghost' village.
The highly symbolic visit was as much a part of France's willingness to face up upward to its wartime past as Frg'southward.

Thousands of French including police and railwaymen participated in the Nazi Holocaust, while collaboration with military units like the SS was also rife.

French President Francois Hollande and Mr Gauck were accompanied by two of only three living survivors of the Oradour massacre, including Robert Hebras, 88.

Mr Hebras, who was 19 at the time, hid nether the corpses of others who were machine-gunned.

'I was consumed by hatred and vengeance for a long time,' said Mr Hebras, adding: 'We must reconcile with the Germans.'

Oradour-sur-Glane

Camille Senon, one of the survivors who witnessed the backwash of the massacre in which her family members died, said: 'Information technology is considered a positive gesture by the Germans to ship investigators'

Oradour-sur-Glane

The remains of the hamlet bakery destroyed by SS troops

Oradour-sur-Glane

Broad shot of the hamlet showing the complete destruction of every single building

Oradour-sur-Glane

Survivors sift through the remains in the immediate aftermath of the 1944 raid by Hitler's troops

Oradour-sur-Glane located on a map of France

Oradour-sur-Glane located on a map of French republic

 VIDEO Tour of Oradour-sur-Glane in pictures...

jamesasher1997.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2535926/Prosecutors-charge-88-year-old-man-1944-Nazi-massacre-Oradour-Sur-Glane-642-villagers-shot-burnt.html

0 Response to "See Jonathan Mandell Art Artists and the Nazis the Modern Fallout Newsday May 3 1998"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel